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The Rural Voice, 1995-05, Page 50TE -EM FARM Wholesale & Retail Open Mon. to Friday 9 to 8 Sat. & Sun. 9 to 6 ts, OPEN/to MAY 5,6&7 Our greenhouses are overflowing with colourful hanging baskets, geraniums, tuberous begonias, bedding plants, herbs, vegetable plants, perennials, etc. All grown in our greenhouse with Tender Loving Care. Nursery stock and windbreak trees also available and landscape plants too. Visit our Perennial Garden through- out the R.R. 1, Bayfield, Ontario WESTSIDE NURSERIES & GREENHOUSES LTD. MAY SPECIALS Large Clump Birch 3 stems or more '94.99 Patmore Ash 60 mm calibre '149.99 Goldflame Spirea Reg. '14.99 Sale '9.99 Bagged topsoil 5 for '10.00 Bagged manure 4 for '10.00 Complete line of.. . shade trees, flowering shrubs, evergreens; More than 70 varieties of roses and 100 varieties of perennials Owen Sound Port Elgin Hwy. 6 & 21 west 899 Goderich St. 519-376-6521 519-389-5258 46 THE RURAL VOICE Gardening Monkshood is the stuff of legends, and of beauty by Rhea Hamilton -Seeger As soon as the snow is off some of the garden I am out peering around the leaves and poking under the last bits of snow to see what will break the ground first. The Christmas roses are always first by at least a week and then it is a race between the snowdrops and the brilliant yellow winter aconites. During an exploratory of the garden this spring I discovered the unfurling leaves of a white monkshood. Last spring, during a moment of weakness, I saw white monkshood for sale and pictured it in a perfect garden. I have a dark purple blue monkshood that blooms during September and October. It is a striking five feet tall and stands out sharply against the first snow. Imagine, the two stately plants, one blazing white and the other spied its new leaves. No, it is not a seeded spot from the purple one since the colour of the leaves is pale green and the more established plant has dark, almost bronze coloured new leaves. Monkshood, also known as Wolfsbane, is one plant that I would heartily recommend. The only drawback is that the juice from both the plant and roots is highly poisonous, so it would be best if left to the back of the garden and keep the young ones from helping you with work in that area. Wolfsbane derives its name from the old superstition that the plant would repel werewolves. There may be some truth here somewhere. The poison from the roots was used in India on spears and arrows and even William Shakespeare mentions the ill effects induced by monkshood in his play King Henry IV. These perennial herbs are from the buttercup family and are officially called Aconitum. The brooding purple. Well, I nurtured that wee specimen for a few weeks. The leaves turned yellow and slowly died away. Well, I kissed that goodbye. So you can imagine my surprise when this spring I